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The 1, 2 and 5 öre were in bronze, the 10, 25, 50 öre and 1 krona and 2 kronor were in silver, and the 10 and 20 kronor were in gold. Gold 5-kronor coins were added in 1881. In 1873 the Scandinavian Monetary Union currency was fixed so that 2,480 kronor purchased 1 kg of gold. In 2017 the price of gold is 365,289 kronor per kg.
March 2017 $3,290,000 1913 1913 Liberty Head nickel: PF-64 CAC United States Hawaii Five-O Heritage Auctions [24] January 2014 $3,172,500 1913 1913 Liberty Head nickel: PR-63 United States George O. Walton Heritage Auctions [25] April 2013 $3,090,000 1927-D Saint-Gaudens double eagle: MS-66+ CAC United States Eliasberg Private sale [26] August ...
The latter's conversion to 4.50 German gold marks (hence, 1 krone = 1.125 marks) established the gold parity of the krone: one gram of fine gold worth 2.79 marks was equivalent to 2.48 krone (or 0.4032 g gold per krone).
Iceland's first coins were 10 and 25 aurar pieces introduced in 1922. These were followed in 1925 by 1 krona and 2 krona pieces and in 1926 by 1, 2 and 5 aurar pieces. In 1946, the coins' designs were altered to remove the royal monogram (CXR), following abolition of the Icelandic monarchy (which had formed a personal union with Denmark) in 1944.
1 Reduction in value of circulating currency. 2 comments. 2 USD rates. 1 comment. 3 Outdated image. 2 comments. 4 Image of current banknotes. ... Talk: Swedish krona ...
A wreath symbolising volume 1 The Wreath from Undset's trilogy Kristin Lavransdatter: 200 kr: 1994−2017: 2018: Kristian Birkeland, scientist: The north pole region with aurora borealis and Birkeland currents: 100 kr: 1995−2017: 2018: Kirsten Flagstad, opera singer: Main hall of Folketeatret, formerly the venue of the Norwegian National ...
In 1875 Norway joined this union. An equal valued krona of the monetary union replaced the three legacy currencies at the rate of 1 krona = ½ Danish rigsdaler = ¼ Norwegian speciedaler = 1 Swedish riksdaler. The new currency (krona) became a legal tender and was accepted in all three countries – Denmark, Sweden and Norway.
The dinar-krone ("krone on dinar") notes were printed as dinar and overprinted with krone at the prescribed ratio. Denominations issued were 2, 4, 20, 40, 80, 400 and 4,000 krone on 1 ⁄ 2, 1, 5, 10, 20, 100 and 1,000 dinar. [27] In total, 1.277 billion dinar were used for the exchange, which corresponds to 5.1 billion krone exchanged. [28]